No lacuna (line 4) is indicated in the manuscripts. Golden tables: cf. stanza 8 and note.

62. Baldr: cf. stanza 32 and note. Baldr and his brother, Hoth, who unwittingly slew him
at Loki's instigation, return together, their union being a symbol of the new age of peace.
Hropt: another name for Othin. His "battle-hall" is Valhall.

63. No lacuna (line 2) indicated in the manuscripts. Hönir: cf. stanza 18 and note. In this
new age he has the gift of foretelling the future. Tveggi ("The Twofold"): another name for
Othin. His brothers are Vili and Ve (cf. Lokasenna, 26, and note). Little is known of them, and
nothing, beyond this reference, of their sons. Vindheim ("Home of the Wind"): heaven.

64. This stanza is quoted by Snorri. Gimle: Snorri makes this the name of the hall itself, while
here it appears to refer to a mountain on which the hall stands. It is the home of the happy, as
opposed to another hall, not here mentioned, for the dead. Snorri's description of this second hall
is based on Voluspo, 38, which he quotes, and perhaps that stanza properly belongs after 64.

65. This stanza is not found in Regius, and is probably spurious. No lacuna is indicated in the Hauksbok
version, but late paper manuscripts add two lines, running:

"Rule he orders, | and rights he fixes,
Laws he ordains | that ever shall live."

The name of this new ruler is nowhere given, and of course the suggestion of Christianity is unavoidable. It is
not certain, how ever, that even this stanza refers to Christianity, and if it does, it may have been interpolated
long after the rest of the poem was composed.

66. This stanza, which fits so badly with the preceding ones, {footnote p. 27} may well have been interpolated. It
has been suggested that the dragon, making a last attempt to rise, is destroyed, this event marking the end of evil
in the world. But in both manuscripts the final half-line does not refer to the dragon, but, as the gender shows, to
the Volva herself, who sinks into the earth; a sort of conclusion to the entire prophecy. Presumably the stanza
(barring the last half-line, which was probably intended as the conclusion of the poem) belongs somewhere in the
description of the great struggle. Nithhogg: the dragon at the roots of Yggdrasil; cf. stanza 39 and note. Nithafjoll
("the Dark Crags"); nowhere else mentioned. Must I: the manuscripts have "must she."]